Friday, July 27, 2007

Judy Blume breaks her routine - can you?

You’re a bit rude and crude
Depraved and lewd
You’re caught in a moral crunch
You’re vexed and perplexed
And way oversexed
So - when can we have lunch?

- with thanks to Judy Blume (believe it or not...)

People don't just react when you change a habit or pattern. They tend to over-react.
Cut your hair. Change jobs. Stop providing free rent to a relative.
The reaction is based on what they view from their perspective, and what self interest is affected.
Judy Blume, famous for her many children's stories about growing up, being a Tween, finding things out without being told, got a lot of grief from her fans for writing an adult novel.
The woman in the story, Sandy, grows tired of the dull routine of her life, and the distance in her relationship, and starts giving in to her impulses, following her fantasies.
I can just imagine the reaction when the suburban mom, who grew up on Judy Blume and is now in her forties, picks up the latest Judy Blume novel for her twelve year old daughter.

Betrayed!
Like seeing a new Darren on "Bewitched" without any explanation.
Like a new Becky Conner replacing Lecy Goranson with Sarah Chalke.
(insert your own TV trivia here....)

I am sure the reaction is the same any time our friends and family see us doing something they didn't expect - or worse, not doing something they've always expected. Especially without checking it out first. The railing and wailing that follows unapproved changes is done merely to convince us that our decison is a wrong one, and to keep peace we must go back and do what is expected of us - by the very people who are wailing and railing. Behaviour modification by lecturing and shunning.

I am fortunate. I exist in a comfortable personal world where innovation and risk are cautiously encouraged. I would not be doing what I am doing if that were not so.

Others around me are not so lucky. Their attempts to be good, to go along, to acquiesce, are followed closely by chest pains and bouts of heavy drinking.

I see them as the pack mules to somebody else's journey.

Now before you go getting any notions about my reading habits, remember i taught Elementary school for eight years. I became well acquainted with Judy Blume as a result. And no, I have not read her adult novel, nor do I have the intention to do so. I do applaud her willingness to step outside and follow her impulse.

"What a strange machine man is! You fill him with bread, wine, fish, and radishes, and out comes sighs, laughter, and dreams."
Nikos Kazantzakis (1885-1957), Greek novelist.

The message here, folks, is if you are not laughing, if you've stopped dreaming, you are not really living.
I like this one as well:

"Creative minds have been known to survive any sort of bad training."
Anna Freud, The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense, 1946.

Music time



Right on theme: A very classy version of "Dreams" by the Corrs, featuring Mick Fleetwood.
Mick is no Carimine Appice, but he is a quality drummer with a distinctive sound.

and....
Steve Earle's "Galway Girl"


her hair was black and her eyes were blue....



later

3 comments:

Maggie May said...

Galway Girl - now that is a fine song.

Og's blog said...

It is refreshing, good sir, that you approve of one of my many offerings.....
I feel so - so - validated.

miss meouch said...

the corrs suck donkies. i hate them.